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10

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  The Basics

Electricity and the Heart

Electricity, an innate biologic electricity, is what makes the heart go.

The EKG is nothing more than a recording of the heart’s electrical

activity, and it is through perturbations in the normal electrical

patterns that we are able to diagnose many different cardiac and

noncardiac disorders.

All You Need to Know About Cellular Electrophysiology

in a Few Brief Paragraphs

Cardiac cells, in their resting state, are electrically polarized;

that is, their insides are negatively charged with respect to their

outsides. This electrical polarity is maintained by membrane

pumps that ensure the appropriate distribution of ions (primarily

potassium, sodium, chloride, and calcium) necessary to keep the

insides of these cells relatively electronegative. These ions pass

into and out of the cell through special ion channels in the cell

membrane.

The resting cardiac cell maintains its electrical polarity by means of a

membrane pump. This pump requires a constant supply of energy, and

the gentleman above, were he real rather than a metaphor, would soon

be flat on his back.